Film of 2003, nostalgia takes us back fifty years, when the depopulated comedies with Doris Day and Rock Hudson. When you began to see the first results of the emancipation of women, starring combative and determined that they would not give in to lure male, but eventually fell in love so desperately fought the man predominates.
In those years, we began to see the first double beds, until a few years previously taboo in American cinema. In a scene from the film That Touch of Mink the protagonist (a sparkling Doris Day, in fact) imagines beds everywhere ...
depopulated duplex phones in restaurants, in clubs, beauty salons. "There is a call for you, Miss" was the phrase that the attentive waiter spoke with the phone in his hand.
The technicolor was a must and environments similar to the viewer favors were living a fairy tale, a surreal life that did not belong to virtually anyone.
The penthouses of New York, the full moon, shiny cars, clothes and hats with toffee, crackling dialogue, this film has it all, but there's more. It 's a very well scripted comedy, beautifully played by Renée Zellweger and Ewan Mcgregor (beautiful), in which the parody, irony and cinematic homage, are mixed in an excellent way to give the end result enjoyable. We laugh a lot too.
Note especially the closing credits, in which the two protagonists enact a nice music scene (both are even sing ...)
rating the film 8.5/10